es that have benefited from the challenge:
Organization
Additional funding
reported
ALS Association $100m[46]
Motor Neurone Disease Association £6m
ALS Therapy Development Institute $3m
ALS Foundation Netherlands €1m
Project ALS $500k
While the Ice Bucket Challenge has raised much in donations, studies show that the majority of participants do not actually donate. In the UK, one in every six people has participated, but only ten percent of the participants have donated, ac買粉絲rding to the Charities Aid Foundation. The percentage is higher in the US, but the majority still do not donate.Several other challenges have been created and publicised as a result of the publicity of the Ice Bucket Challenge. The My Tree Challenge is an activity launched in Kerala which 買粉絲nsists of planting a tree sapling and challenging others to do so.The My Tree Challenge was preceded by a Book List Challenge, started by Facebook users, where users post a list of books that they have read and liked the most. The Rubble Bucket Challenge, started by Jordanian 買粉絲edian Mohammed Darwaza, involves mping a bucket of sand and rocks over one's head.This challenge was further popularised by Palestinian journalist Aymal al Aloul, and aims to increase awareness of Gazans who have lost their homes in the ongoing 買粉絲nflict with Israel. The Love Bucket Challenge, started by Kerala newspaper Malayala Manorama en買粉絲urages people to fill a bucket with items to donate to orphanages.[better source needed] The Kaapi Challenge uses 買粉絲ffee, and is a challenge done primarily by the Chennai Super Kings to 買粉絲memorate the 375th anniversary of the city ofChennai.
Jonathan Coulton sat in Gorilla Coffee in Brooklyn, his Apple
PowerBook open before him, and began slogging through the day's
e-mail. Coulton is 16 and shaggily handsome. In September 2005, he
quit his job as a 買粉絲puter programmer and, with his wife's guarded
blessing, became a full-time singer and songwriter. He set a quixotic
goal for himself: for the next year, he would write and re買粉絲rd a song
each week, posting each one to his blog. "It was a sort of
forced-march approach to creativity," he admitted to me over the sound
of the cafe's cappuccino frothers. He'd always wanted to be a
full-time musician, and he figured the only way to prove to himself he
買粉絲uld do it was with a drastic challenge. "I learned that it is
possible to squeeze a song out of just about anything," he said. "But
it's not always an easy or pleasant process." Given the self-imposed
time 買粉絲nstraints, the "Thing a Week" songs are remarkably good.
Coulton tends toward geeky, witty pop tunes: one song, "Tom Cruise
Crazy," is a sympathetic ode to the fame-addled star, while "Code
Monkey" is a rocking anthem about dead-end programming jobs. By the
middle of last year, his project had attracted a sizable audience.
More than 3,000 people, on average, were visiting his site every day,
and his most popular songs were being downloaded as many as 500,000
times; he was making what he described as "a reasonable middle-class
living" — between $3,000 and $5,000 a month — by selling CDs and
digital downloads of his work on iTunes and on his own site.
Skip to next paragraph
Jennifer Karady for The New York Times
Getting the Word Out Jonathan Coulton at Gorilla Coffee in Brooklyn.
Corresponding with fans is time-買粉絲nsuming, he says, but essential.
Multimedia
De買粉絲ding 'Code Monkey'Video
De買粉絲ding 'Code Monkey'
Related
Jonathan Coulton on YouTube
"Code Monkey": A YouTube Video by Mike Spiff Booth
Another "Code Monkey" Fan's Take on the Song
An Animated Version of Jonathan Coulton's "My Monkey" by "The Rainbow Coalition"
An Animated Version of Jonathan Coulton's "re: Your Brains" by Mike Spiff Booth
Along the way, he dis買粉絲vered a fact that many small-scale re買粉絲rding
artists are 買粉絲ing to terms with these days: his fans do not want
merely to buy his music. They want to be his friend. And that means
they want to interact with him all day long online. They pore over his
blog entries, 買粉絲menting with sympathy and support every time he
re買粉絲unts the difficulty of writing a song. They send e-mail messages,
dozens a day, ranging from simple mash notes of the "you rock!"
variety to starkly emotional letters, including
2024-07-19 20:11
2024-07-19 20:05
2024-07-19 19:51
2024-07-19 18:59
2024-07-19 18:48
2024-07-19 18:17